Votes in Congress Service
WASHINGTON -- Here’s how area members of Congress voted in the week ending June 19.
HOUSE
WAR BUDGET: Voting 226 for and 202 against, the House on June 16 approved the conference report on a bill (HR 2346) to appropriate $80 billion through Sept. 30 for U.S. combat operations and $26 billion for non-military programs. The bill was backed by 221 Democrats and five Republicans and opposed by 170 Republicans and 32 Democrats. Republicans objected mainly to the bill’s $5 billion outlay for the International Monetary Fund, and most Democratic foes were casting anti-war votes.
The bill provides $51.3 billion for actions in Iraq and Afghanistan; $25.8 billion for repairing or replacing military equipment and $534 million for payments to troops whose enlistments were extended against their will after 9/11. The payments will total $500 for each month served under these “stop-loss” orders.
The bill appropriates $10 billion in non-military aid to countries such as Pakistan and Afghanistan, $7 billion to combat flu pandemics and $1 billion for a new program in which consumers can receive government vouchers of up to $4,500 for buying or leasing new vehicles that are more fuel-efficient.
A yes vote was to approve the conference report.
MASSACHUSETTS Voting yes: John Olver, D-1, Richard
Neal, D-2, Barney Frank, D-4, Edward Markey, D-7,
Stephen Lynch, D-9, William Delahunt, D-10
Voting no: James McGovern, D-3, Niki Tsongas,
D-5, John Tierney, D-6, Michael Capuano, D-8
Not voting: None
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT BUDGET: Voting 259 for and 157 against, the House on June 18 passed a bill (HR 2847) appropriating $64.4 billion for the fiscal 2010 budgets of the Justice and Commerce departments, the National Aeronautics and Space Agency and several other agencies. The bill represents a 12 percent spending increase over 2009.
In part, the bill provides $18.2 billion for NASA; $7.7 billion for the FBI; $7.4 billion for the Census Bureau; $6.9 billion for the National Science Foundation; $4.6 billion for the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration; $3.4 billion for crime-prevention grants to state and local governments; $2 billion for the Drug Enforcement Administration; $1.5 billion for fighting Mexican drug cartels; $1 billion for science education; $802 million to help communities hire police officers and acquire police technology; $440 million for the Legal Services Corp., and $400 million for the Office on Violence Against Women.
George Miller, D-Calif., said the bill raises counter-terrorism and intelligence spending while making “long-overdue reinvestments in traditional Department of Justice missions like drug and firearms enforcement, regulation of the marketplace, protection of civil rights and liberties, support of the judicial process....”
Mike Pence, R-Ind., called the bill “runaway federal spending” and said Republicans “will stand up for the American people, for their right to have a budget that reflects the same discipline and sacrifice that every American family and that every small business are making during these difficult times.”
A yes vote was to pass the bill.
MASSACHUSETTS Voting yes: Olver, Neal (MA),
McGovern, Frank (MA), Tsongas, Tierney, Markey
(MA), Capuano, Lynch, Delahunt
Voting no: None
Not voting: None
GUANTANAMO BAY: Voting 212 for and 213 against, the House on June 18 refused to bar the use of funds in HR 2847 (above) to carry out President Obama’s decision to close the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The amendment went beyond a ban already in the bill on releasing Guantanamo prisoners into the U.S.
Jerry Lewis, R-Calif., said the administration “is stonewalling the Congress” over Guantanamo. “We need to stop the administration from rushing to transfer or to resettle any more detainees at the expense of an increased risk to Americans.”
Alan Mollohan, D-W.Va., called Guantanamo “an embarrassment” that has “fomented a lot of opposition to the United States.” Keeping it open “is a basic assault on our values and... undermines the success (of) our counter-terrorism programs.”
A yes vote was to keep Guantanamo open.
MASSACHUSETTS Voting yes: None
Voting no: Olver, Neal (MA), McGovern, Frank
(MA), Tsongas, Tierney, Markey (MA), Capuano,
Lynch, Delahunt
Not voting: None
LEGAL SERVICES CORPORATION: Voting 105 for and 323 against, the House on June 18 defeated an amendment to HR 2847 (above) to shut down the Legal Services Corporation, which is the main federal program for providing the poor with legal representation. The amendment sought to eliminate the agency’s $440 million fiscal 2010 budget.
Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, said government auditors have found the program riddled by “waste, fraud and abuse. And should we actually be taxing taxpayers to force them to subsidize their neighbors to turn around and sue them? I don’t think so.”
Alan Mollohan, D-W.Va., said the Legal Services Corporation is needed “more than ever” in a recession, with “51 million Americans...now eligible for legal aid, including 18 million children.”
A yes vote backed the amendment.
MASSACHUSETTS Voting yes: None
Voting no: Olver, Neal (MA), McGovern, Frank
(MA), Tsongas, Tierney, Markey (MA), Capuano,
Lynch, Delahunt
Not voting: None
SENATE
WAR BUDGET: Voting 91 for and five against, the Senate on June 18 sent President Obama a bill (HR 2346) appropriating $106 billion through September for purposes such as funding U.S. combat in Afghanistan and Iraq; sending non-military aid to Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East; containing flu on a global scale; fighting Mexican drug cartels; supporting the International Monetary Fund; providing disaster aid to areas of the United States, and funding a new program to help consumers replace gas-guzzlers with fuel-efficient vehicles.
About 75 percent of the spending is for the U.S. military. Three Republicans, one Democrat and one independent voted against the bill.
Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said the bill “starts us on the path of bringing our troops home from Iraq...and changes our focus in Afghanistan, which has been very scattered, and focuses us on routing out the Taliban, who make it possible for al Qaeda to thrive.”
Russ Feingold, D-Wis., said more than 50,000 U.S. troops could remain indefinitely in Iraq despite President Obama’s announced pullout. He said this “could undercut the benefits of redeployment, and might result in a significant uptick in violence against U.S. troops.”
A yes vote was to pass the bill.
MASSACHUSETTS Voting yes: John Kerry, D
Voting no: None
Not voting: Edward Kennedy, D
Roll Call
Congressional roll call for week of June 15
- Local News
-
-
A long road to graduation for Salem High senior
SALEM — When he receives his diploma tonight in the Salem High field house, Greg Martinez plans to cross the stage with a walker.
It will be only a few steps, but it will mark a milestone in a journey that was hard to imagine five years ago, the attainment of a goal that few dreamed possible on Aug. 15, 2007. -
Salem High valedictorian in a class by himself
SALEM — All by himself, Jesus Morales has swept aside the stereotypes, the demographic data and the educational studies.
He is an 18-year-old boy from a low-income family.
He went through school on the federally subsidized free and reduced lunch program. -
Delegates torn about DeFranco's Senate bid
Marisa DeFranco needs 750 votes this weekend, or 10,000 signatures will be for naught.
The long-shot U.S. Senate candidate from Middleton has splashed onto the national political scene in recent weeks by stubbornly standing between Democratic establishment candidate Elizabeth Warren and a clear path to the party's nomination. -
Ferry season opens June 8
SALEM — The Salem ferry opens the 2012 season in one week.
Boston Harbor Cruises announced yesterday that it is taking over the Salem-to-Boston service and will make its first run on Friday, June 8. -
Governor brings energy to ceremony for Cummings Center's solar panels
BEVERLY — Gov. Deval Patrick went to the top floor of the West Garage of the Cummings Center yesterday afternoon to cut the ribbon on a 366-kilowatt solar power installation.
Touting the state's investments in clean energy and life sciences, the governor spoke before approximately 100 people, many of them tenants of the Cummings Center. - Not yet summer, but Salem already bustling
- Police: Teen bolts from courthouse
- Summer program offered at Bates School
- Salem Republicans will host Tisei
- Race will benefit family of fallen Peabody firefighter
- Rail trail's big day to go on rain or shine
- Comedy night to raise money for animal rescue group
- Council sinks proposed garage
- Mom held in assault on daughter
- Police
- Teen bolts from courthouse, triggers search
- At last, Bridge Street to be paved
- Photo Gallery: 2012 Graduations
- Peabody tilts at state's 40B housing law
- HOOPING IT UP
- Tisei will not sign no-tax-hike pledge
- Danvers High auctioning off old photo, kitchen, TV equipment
- Panhandler charged with theft attempt
- Suspect ID'd, girlfriend charged in holdup
- Alumni flock to honor leader of the band
- Man gets 5-6 years in scanner attack
- Homeless man charged with groping woman
- Officer struck on 128 ramp
- Police
- Defense lawyer fights theory teen was texting before crash
-
A long road to graduation for Salem High senior



